More
Childless Westerners
are Turning to Chinese Medicine, Say Doctors
Childless Westerners in
Hong Kong are increasingly turning to traditional Chinese medicine to improve
their chances of having a baby, according to two practitioners.
The patients - mostly
French and British women - are using Chinese herbs and acupuncture to achieve
optimal health and stimulate their hormones after the use of Western procedures
alone failed them. This despite a lack of research proving the efficacy of
traditional Chinese medicine in fertility.
One fertility
specialist, who believes women can boost their rate of conception by combining
Chinese and Western therapies, said she was seeing a dozen new cases every week
- both Chinese and non-Chinese.
"There is an
increasing trend in foreign patients seeking treatment from us, many of them
referred by Western doctors to supplement their fertility treatment," said
Dr Michelle Law Pui-man, a registered Chinese medicine practitioner who also
holds a PhD in public health.
"I believe it is a
result of an increasing recognition of traditional Chinese medicine in the
West."
Law pointed to one
benefit: "The health of the uterus is essential for embryo development.
Traditional Chinese medicine therapy aims to optimise nourishment of the
uterus."
Kwan Chi-yee, president
of the Chinese Herbalists Association, said he had observed the same trend in
foreigners.
He said traditional
medicines could target specific aspects of a woman's health and create the best
possible conditions for her to conceive. He cautioned, however, that in the
absence of clinical data, any help it offered could not be conclusively proven.
Law said that from
experience, using both types of therapies together could raise the rate of
conception by 15 per cent, depending on the patient's age. However, she did not
recommend relying solely on traditional Chinese medicine in order to get
pregnant.
The past four years had
seen a 15 per cent rise in the number of childless foreign women seeking help
from Law. They account for about 65 per cent of all her patients with fertility
difficulties.
To read the full story, click here.
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